Timeline of Hipness
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1930s. Tricksters Place: Harlem, NY. Timeline of Lenox Avenue. (p. 49) hipness Beats and Hipsters. 1940s 1937 Dan Burley's social-observation column ‘Back Door Stuff’ starts running in the NY Amsterdam News 1941-42 Quizzicale, program 1943 Mr Big, film ● Life, photo essay that portrayed hipsterism as zany but 1946 harmless teenage hijinks (p.57) 1948 ● Ebony article ● Really the blues Mezz Mezzrow and Bernard Wolfe (p. 52) ● Time article about Dizzy Gillespie ● Ornithology, Charlie Parker “This solo has a sense of being ● Make mine freedom, Cartoon short in its song structure without quite being of it. It signals ● Neurotica, first hip magazine awareness of its song structure, of course – the intricate ● ‘Tea for two’, John Clellon Holmes, in Neurotica, games improvisers play have no meaning without reference first hipster fiction to it- but the tendency of the bebop improvisation is to pull ● ‘Portrait of a hipster’, Anatole Broyard in Partisan Review away from its orbit, to take an alternate path, to tell a ● Misterioso, Thelonious Monk different story: to go out.” (p. 123) 1949 Intuition and Digression, Lennie Tristano 1949-51 Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and John Clellon Holmes make their home recordings at Holmes’s Lexington Ave. Hip literature/cinema. 1950s apartment 1951 Kerouac writes the scroll version of On The Road 1952 ● Go, novel by John Clellon Holmes ● 4'33, John Cage ● Visions of Cody, Jack Kerouac (not published until 1972) ● Who walk in Darkness, novel by Chandler Brossard Howl, poem by Allen Ginsberg 1956 1957 ● The White Negro, Norman Mailer 1958 ● Evergreen Review, magazine The Alabama Concerto, John Benson Brooks ● Sound museum, Ken Nordine (p. 144) 1959 ● On the Road, Jack Kerouac (p. 111) ● Pull my daisy, film (p. 106) ● Shadows, film (until 1959) ● The Connection, Jack Gelber, play ● Off minor, Thelonious Monk ● ‘The hip and square’, list, in Advertisements for Myself by Norman Mailer (p. 118) ● The Holy Barbarians, Lawrence Lipton, documentary Mass Counterculture. 1960s non-fiction ● So what, Miles Davis Place: Greenwich Village and San Francisco. The Movement, 1965-1975 (p. 113) 1960 ●‘Entropy’, short story by Thomas Pynchon (p. 126) Creem, Crawdaddy!, Rolling stone magazines ● Ramparts, and Liberation radical political publications The sound, Ross Russell (p.84) drawing on his 1961 1962 experiences in the 1940s The Gutenberg Galaxy, Marshall McLuhan book (p. 140) 1963 1964 Blues People, LeRoi Jones [Amiri Baraka], book Pauwels and Bergier's Morning of the Magicians published in English translation ● An American Dream, Norman Mailer, novel 1965 ● Ballad of a thin man, Bob Dylan (p. 126) 1967 Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, The Beatles ● Avant Slant, John Benson Brooks, music (p.179) 1968 ● Stewart Brand published the first Whole Earth Catalog 1969 ● The Living Theatre, Paradise Now, play Woodstock music festival.